.NET Tips and Tricksby Peter Vogel

A Blazor Tip You Should Almost Certainly Ignore

In another column, I describe how you can, from JavaScript, call methods on C# objects defined in Blazor pages. As that sentence implies, however, there's no way to access properties on those objects ... at least, no official, documented way.

It can be done, however. To make a method on a class accessible from JavaScript, you decorate the method with the JSInvokable attribute. You can, it turns out, do the same thing with properties, like this:

public string FirstName { [JSInvokable] get; [JSInvokable] set; }

Once you've done that, you can read and set the FirstName property from a JavaScript function by treating the property's getter and setter like methods. This JavaScript code, for example, sets the FirstName property to "Jan" and then reads the value back out of the property (see that earlier column for all the ugly details):

While I've an auto-implemented property here, this also works with "fully implemented properties" with explicit getters and setters.

The Blazor documentation doesn't mention this "feature," which may mean that it's just a "happy accident" (it certainly seems to depend on the internal implementation of properties). As such it may be wiped out in the next release of Blazor or replaced with some better, slicker syntax.

But if you're working with Blazor and really want to access properties, there it is.